The first week of the month brought April showers, as well as artificial intelligence and robot funding. From logistics to aerospace, agriculture, and manufacturing, multiple industries stand to benefit from the latest deals.

These robotics investments and more can be found in the RBR Transactions Database, which lets you sort deals by company, industry, technology, or transaction type. Don’t be all wet — let’s get to the roundup!

Robot funding working all around

One of the biggest moves this week was the $25 million investment in 6 River Systems for its logistics and order-fulfillment platform, affectionately named “Chuck” (after Boston’s Charles River). Menlo Ventures led the Series B round, with participation by Norwest Ventures, Eclipse Ventures, and iRobot. 6 River Systems said it plans to use the money to hire more employees and create a larger fleet of Chuck robots.

Cobalt Robotics, a Palo Alto, Calif.-based creator of indoor security robots, received $13 million in Series A funding. Sequoia led the round, with participation from the Founders Fund, Storm Ventures, Promus Ventures, and Bloomberg Beta, among others.

Cobalt said it plans to use the robot funding to expand into new cities, extend its engineering and operations teams, and bring the system to new markets. The company’s security robots take advantage of the latest autonomous vehicle, machine learning, anomaly detection and two-way telepresence technologies. They are intended to allow security guards to respond more effectively to situations from a remote location.

The company said it will use the money to further expand its research and development group, as well as to “accelerate growth mostly organically and through strategic acquisition opportunities that may arise.”

Coveo uses intelligent search and AI to personalize digital experiences for its users. It said it combines unified content, interactions, and machine learning to then deliver “relevant information and recommendations across every business interaction.” The company’s software is embedded in many business applications, including those from Adobe, Microsoft, and Salesforce.

When most people hear about AI and the film industry, they think about movies like The Matrix or The Terminator, but one company is using AI to help filmmakers create their projects faster. Arraiy, a computer vision and machine learning platform, recently announced that it has raised more than $10 million in Series A funding.

The investment was led by Lux Capital and Softbank Ventures, with new participation from Dentsu Ventures and Cherry Tree Investments and continued participation from IDG Capital and CRCM Ventures.

The company said it will use the money to hire more employees, scale its product portfolio and “fuel expansion in the professional film market.”

Arraiy claims that its AI-based production workflow can simplify the production process, bringing in “top-tier visuals for significantly lower costs.”

Intellectual property software creator Legitannounced $2.6 million in seed funding, led by Eniac Ventures, with participation from Elementum Ventures and Max Ventures. The company makes natural language processing software for researchers, scientists, and engineers. Legit said its interface lets inventors “determine the patentable aspects of what they are working on, allowing inventors to more efficiently turn their ideas into inventions using artificial intelligence.”

Finally, WorkFusionraised $50 million in Series E funding, to help enterprises with their robotic process automation (RPA) efforts. Hawk Equity and Declaration Partners led the round, with a total investment level of $118 million. Previous investors Georgian Partners, iNovia Captial, and NGP Capital also participated in the latest robotics funding round.

IoT companies face acquisitions

Credit: Geralt via Pixabay

Internet of Things platform provider Particle announced it recently acquired RedBear, an IoT hardware company based in Shenzhen and Hong Kong, China. Founded in 2012, RedBear will add its “expertise in building Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) and Wi-Fi-enabled IoT hardware” to Particle’s product line.

In addition, Wind River, owned by Intel since 2008, announced it had been sold to investment firm TPG, returning to being an independent company. The company’s software helps run computing systems at manufacturing plants, as well as in medical devices, aircraft, railway infrastructure, automobiles, and communications networks.

Wrapping up the rest

Here’s the remaining robot funding for the past few weeks. Remember, you can always track transactions in the RBR Transactions Database:

Keith Shaw is the Editor for Robotics Business Review. Prior to joining EH Publishing, he worked as an editor for Network World, Computerworld and various newspapers across Massachusetts, New York, and Florida. He holds a degree in journalism from Syracuse University.